Kucinich: Retirement it is
Published May 18, 2012
WASHINGTON — Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) announced that he will not run for a House seat in Washington after losing the Democratic nomination for his seat in Ohio.
“After careful consideration and discussions with Elizabeth and my closest friends, I have decided that, at this time, I can best serve from outside the Congress,” Kucinich said this week in a statement posted on his website.
Kucinich, a perennial presidential candidate and former Cleveland mayor, will retire from the U.S. House of Representatives at the end of his eighth term.
In March, following redistricting that placed his district in the same district with fellow Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur, Kucinich lost the primary; however, he did flirt with the idea of running in an open seat race in Washington.
During his time in the U.S. House, Kucinich was a consistent critic of Israel.
He advocated increased U.S. pressure on Israel to make concessions toward peace.
He routinely voted against legislation backed by pro-Israel groups, most recently on Thursday, when he was one of 11 members to vote against a non-binding resolution that rejected ‘containment’ of Iran’s suspected nuclear weapons program. The measure passed, with 401 members voting in favor.
In 2010, following Israel’s raid on the Turkish Mavi Marmara flotilla en route to Gaza, Kucinich condemned Israel for its “act of belligerence against Turkey” in a letter to President Obama regarding the raid.
“The attack on the Mavi Marmara requires consequences for the Netanyahu Administration and for the State of Israel,” Kucinich wrote. “Those consequences must be dealt by the United States. They must be diplomatic and they must be financial.”
Kucinich was also a vocal critic of Iran sanctions, arguing that sanctions were “counterproductive” in 2009 and amount “to economic warfare against the Iranian people.”